BAWL & Friends Newsletter

December 2025 Edition

Hello, Writers,

All the best to you and yours for the 2025 end-of-year holidays. I did some research on December holidays and that is the subject of the feature this month - just in case other curious minds want to know how many religious holidays occur in December. 

Who wants to submit a Feature for January? Contact editorbawl@gmail.com.

Looking back on 2025, it has been a good year for BAWL. We elected a new president, we had twice monthly critique group sessions, and a monthly in-person meeting. Much thanks to the new president, Kate Sangar for all her efforts in leading those sessions and meetings.

Kate has also spearheaded the 2025 BAWL Anthology: Flying. We had hoped the anthology would be ready for the holidays but looks like we will be publishing it in January, 2026. The launch party will be scheduled the minute we have the exact launch date.

We did lose the twice weekly write-in events. That event could be yours to lead. Just speak up and take charge. Contact editorbawl@gmail.com to get the ball rolling. Julie will also not be having her write-in event for the month of December. Check with her on Facebook to ensure her write-ins resume as expected in January, 2026. 

There are no events for December and none yet created for 2026. But expect Kate's twice per month critique group events and the monthly in-person meeting to resume in January 2026. 

Until next year, best wishes for Peace and Goodwill to each and every one of you.

- Kelley

Writing Prompt Image of the Month: 


Writing Trivia:

Charles Dickens’s idea for A Christmas Carol originated in the north of England when he traveled to speak at the Manchester Athenaeum, a sort of philanthropic organization for the working poor—a population that was largely uneducated, powerless, exploited by factory owners, and ignored by everyone else. He was part of an event in October 1843 that was intended to raise money for the Athenaeum; he shared the stage with the prominent politicians Richard Cobden and Benjamin Disraeli.

Dickens was already a popular and successful novelist, a self-made man with a social conscience. His time in Manchester convinced him that he needed to confront the problems of Want and Ignorance, which he personified in his Christmas tale as two horrifying children. These were the threats facing England, and they were being bred in the slums of the country’s newly industrialized cities. Dickens could fight them, he decided.

Six weeks later, A Christmas Carol was finished.

Dickens continued writing what he called his Christmas Books for several years afterward. They were popular in their time, but none of the others have gone into endless rotation on television or on the stage. Only A Christmas Carol became a modern fairy tale. - Britannica Encyclopedia

Inspirational Quote of the Month:

"And ye, who have met with Adversity's blast,

And been bow'd to the earth by its fury;

To whom the Twelve Months, that have recently pass'd

Were as harsh as a prejudiced jury—

Still, fill to the Future! and join in our chime,

The regrets of remembrance to cozen,

And having obtained a New Trial of Time,

Shout in hopes of a kindlier dozen."

- Thomas Hood (1799-1845)


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